Forbidden Planet is on TCM right now, which gives me the perfect excuse to share this scene from the film. I don’t care what anybody else says — that’s one scary monster!
Monthly Archives: January 2014
Trailer: The Monkey King
One of my guilty pleasure films of the past 20 years was this little martial fantasy flick called Storm Riders. I think most everyone of my generation who heard about it ended up seeking it out.
I have a feeling the same thing will happen for this latest generation when they hear whispers and ever-growing tales of Donnie Yen’s The Monkey King. It has Yen in heavy make-up to look ike The Monkey King from the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West. It has Chow Yun-Fat as the Jade Emperor. What else does one need. Plus, it’s in IMAX 3D!
The Monkey King has been given a September 14, 2014 release date for North America
44 Days of Paranoia #38: Z (dir by Costa-Gavras)
(SPOILERS!)
For today’s entry in the 44 Days of Paranoia, we take a look at the 1969 political thriller, Z.
Though Z is based on events that actually happened in Greece and features a soundtrack of Greek music that manages to be both haunting and lively at the same time, the film itself takes place in an unnamed, European country. While the country is officially a democracy, it’s actually controlled by a cabal of politicians and military leaders who use fear and intimidation to maintain power.
As the film opens, The Deputy (played by the charismatic Yves Montand) and his aides arrive in a small city. That night, the Deputy is scheduled to speak a rally for nuclear disarmament. As we’re shown from the start of the film, the outspoken Deputy is considered to be a threat by both his country’s government and the United States as well. Despite having received word that an attempt is going to be made on his life, the Deputy speaks at the rally. After the rally, as the Deputy walks across the street, a truck comes out of nowhere. A man in the back of the truck strikes the deputy with a club, killing him. The official story is that the Deputy was simply hit and killed by a drunk driver but the Deputy’s followers know otherwise.
Realizing that the Deputy has the potential to be an even more powerful symbol in death than he was when he was alive, the government assigns the Magistrate (Jean-Louis Trintignat) to investigate the Deputy’s death. Since the Magistrate is known to have political ambitions of his own, it’s assumed that he’ll simply rubber stamp the government’s story. However, the Magistrate surprises everyone by turning out to be a man of integrity. Working with a journalist (Jacques Perrin), his investigation uncovers a conspiracy and leads to the indictment of several high level military officials. In a scene that will be familiar to anyone who has ever seen a movie, the Deputy’s wife (Irene Pappas) is told that the men responsible for her husband’s murder will be held responsible…
And this is where you would normally expect the film to end.
However, Z goes on for another few minutes and it’s those final minutes that elevate this film from just being a well-made thriller to being one of the most effective political films ever made. The film’s narrator informs us that the government was subsequently overthrown by the military. The indictments were dismissed. The Magistrate was reassigned to other duties. The “drunk drivers” who were officially held responsible for the Deputy’s death were given light sentences. As for the Deputy’s loyal aides, some were forced into exile while another was killed while running from police. Finally, we’re told:
“Concurrently, the military banned long hair on males; mini-skirts; Sophocles; Tolstoy; Euripedes; smashing glasses after drinking toasts; labor strikes; Aristophanes; Ionesco; Sartre; Albee; Pinter; freedom of the press; sociology; Beckett; Dostoyevsky; modern music; popular music; the new mathematics; and the letter “Z”, which in ancient Greek means “He is alive!”
As the film ends, a long list of everything and everyone that has been banned rolls up the screen. It’s a devastating scene, one that firmly establishes that the greatest enemy of dictatorship (as well as the first victim) is freedom of thought.
However, even before that ending, Z had already established itself as a powerful film. I usually dread watching politically themed films because, for the most part, I find them to be drearily heavy-handed. Well, make no doubt about it, Z is a very political film and it’s also a very heavy-handed film. However, it’s so well-acted and well-directed that I hardly minded the fact that the film was essentially trying to indoctrinate me. It’s rare that you find a polemical film that also works as entertainment but Z is one of those rare films.
Z made history in 1970 when it was the first film to be nominated by the Academy for both Best Foreign Language Film and Best Picture of the Year. Watching it today, it’s easy to understand why Z was so honored. It remains an exciting thriller, a powerful political statement, and a bold call to action.
Z, incidentally, won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. However, best picture was won by Midnight Cowboy.
Other Entries In The 44 Days of Paranoia
- Clonus
- Executive Action
- Winter Kills
- Interview With The Assassin
- The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald
- JFK
- Beyond The Doors
- Three Days of the Condor
- They Saved Hitler’s Brain
- The Intruder
- Police, Adjective
- Burn After Reading
- Quiz Show
- Flying Blind
- God Told Me To
- Wag the Dog
- Cheaters
- Scream and Scream Again
- Capricorn One
- Seven Days In May
- Broken City
- Suddenly
- Pickup on South Street
- The Informer
- Chinatown
- Compliance
- The Lives of Others
- The Departed
- A Face In The Crowd
- Nixon
- The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
- The Purge
- The Stepford Wives
- Saboteur
- A Dark Truth
- The Fugitive
- The Day of Jackal
AMV of the Day: Devil’s Game 2.0
I think it’s not a secret that the anime series (and now the three films) Puella Magi Madoka Magica is one of my favorite anime. It’s not just me who has a major fondness for this anime. Site anime editor pantsukudasai56 also shares my passion for this series. Over a couple years ago I profiled several AMVs featuring this series. One of them was Chiikaboom’s Devil’s Game.
That very same editor decided to go back and re-edit the AMV using scenes from the series and the three films and what we get is a vast improvement over a video that was already a classic in the AMV scene. The animation from the films are much more crisp and the detail shows from the increased budget.
This “Devil’s Game 2.0” has now become one of my top AMVs ever and I’m sure I’m not the only one who feels this way.
Anime: Puella Magi Madoka Magica, Puella Magi Madoka Magica Movie 1: Beginnings, Puella Magi Madoka Magica Movie 2: Eternal, Puella Magi Madoka Magica Movie 3: Rebellion
Song: “A Demon’s Fate” by Within Temptation
Creator: Chiikaboom
Past AMVs of the Day
- Animegraphy 2013 (Various)
- See Who I Am (Various)
- Demons of the Past (Black Lagoon: Roberta’s Blood Trail)
- Ride or Die (Redline)
- Yurei (Another, Dusk Maiden of Amnesia, Mirai Nikki)
- Bloody Ayase (Oreimo)
- The End of My World (Clannad/Clannad: After Story)
- Life Is Fantastic (Nichijou)
- Event (Nichijou)
- Star x Crossed (Romeo x Juliet)
- Protectors of the Earth (Shingeki no Kyojin)
- Let Them Eat Rei (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
- Sorry for being Hercule, Sincerely Mr. Satan (Dragonball Z)
- Fidelity (Wolf Children Ame and Yuki)
- Nothing to Lose (One Piece)
- Affective Schoolgirls (Nichijou)
- RadioAkshun (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
- Danger Zone (Macross Plus)
- Maid to Kill (Black Lagoon)
- A Thousand Years (Clannad/Toradora!)
- Careful What You Wish (Black Lagoon)
- Ash vs Gary (Pokemon)
- Just Can’t Get Enough (Bakemonogatari)
- Our Miracle (Sword Art Online)
- Dead End (Mirai Nikki)
- Am I Not Human? (Another)
- Moves Like Jagger (NSFW)
- Mayoi Calling Araragi (Bakemonogatari)
- Troll of Hearts (The World God Only Knows)
- Written in the Spirals (Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann)
- The Way You Are
- Means to an Endgame (Code Geass)
- Azumanga Daioh 1985
- Safety Dance (Nichijou)
- Cherry – Chronicles of PHOTOpanic
- Remember My Name
- Futuristic Lover (Bakemonogatari)
- Sexy and I Know It
- Everytime We Touch (Toradora!)
- War (Valkyria Chronicles)
- Hold On To That Feeling
- Disco Heaven
- Hands Up! (Dragonball/Z)
- A Little Late
- Sexy
- I Heart Tsundere
- The New Era (One Piece)
- Fairytale of Lies
- Calling
- Alchanum
- This Is War (One Piece)
- Move Along (One Piece)
- Party Rock (One Piece)
- Remember the Name (One Piece)
- Imagica
- Maya and Company
- Who’s That Chick?
- Just The Way You Are
- My First Kiss
- Death Romance
- Furor (Oreimo)
- Highschool of the Dead Game
- Kobato – Ring A Bell
- Devil’s Game
- Mahou Shoujo Requiem
- A Prelude to Dreams
- A Thousand Miles (Macross Frontier)
- Instinct
- Hold Me Now (Princess Tutu)
- The Beautiful People of Black Lagoon
- SugardanSen & Attack of the Otaku
- Fairy Tail Teenage Dream
- Repeat (Puella Magi Madoka Magica)
- Toradora! Rough Love (Grow A Pear)
- Black Lagoon…To Be Loved
- This Is War (Fullmetal Alchemist)
- Danse De Raven
- Azumanga Daioh – Little Girls
- Something Fishy
- And Now, A Word From Our Sponsors
- Against All Odds (Macross Frontier)
- A Thousand Miles (Todaradora!)
- Toradora Fireflies
- Spinning Infinity
- Have You Got It In You?
- Azumanga Daioh Portal
6 Trailers That Are Too Hot For YouTube
Hi! It’s time for another edition of Lisa Marie’s Favorite Grindhouse and Exploitation Film trailers! This week, all of our trailers have one thing in common: they’re all too hot for YouTube!
A special thank you to Johnny Stanwyck for uploading these trailers to YouTube. You can check out Johnny’s site, The Grindhouse Schoolhouse, by clicking here.
1) Erotic Nights of the Living Dead (1980)
George Eastman certainly seems to be amused!
2) Gail Palmer’s Prisoner of Paradise (1980)
3) Love Dreams (1981)
4) Joy (1977)
5) Sex Wish (1976)
6) Nothing To Hide (1981)
What do you think, Trailer Kitty?
Here Are The DGA Nominees
The Director’s Guild of America has announced their nominees for the best director of 2013.
And here they are:
Alfonso Cuaron for Gravity
Paul Greengass for Captain Phillips
Steve McQueen for 12 Years A Slave
David O. Russell for American Hustle
Martin Scorsese for The Wolf of Wall Street
Lisa Marie Picks The Best 26 Films of 2013
2o13 was an unusually good year in film. While there was never any doubt what my number one film would be, it took me considerably longer to narrow down my other favorites to just 25 movies.
Also complicating matters is that a film that I’m very much looking forward to, Spike Jonze’s Her, is not going to be opening here until next weekend. Because I haven’t seen it, I could not consider it for this list. If, after I do see it, I feel that it belongs in the top 26, I will add it.
(Update: I have since seen Her and I have modified my original list. — LMB, 1/1o/14)
You may be asking, “Why 26 films?” Lisa doesn’t do odd numbers, that’s why.
Without further ado, here’s the list!
- Upstream Color
- American Hustle
- Frances Ha
- Her
- Before Midnight
- Blue Is The Warmest Color
- Spring Breakers
- 12 Years A Slave
- Fruitvale Station
- Inside Llewyn Davis
- The Wolf of Wall Street
- Warm Bodies
- The Counselor
- Gravity
- Blue Jasmine
- The Spectacular Now
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Dallas Buyers Club
- The Conjuring
- Drinking Buddies
- Iron Man 3
- Nebraska
- The Place Beyond The Pines
- At Any Price
- The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
- All Is Lost
- The Iceman
- Frozen
(Now that you’ve seen my favorites of 2013, check out my picks for 2010, 2011, and 2012!)
Other Entries In TSL’s Look Back At 2013:
- Lisa Marie’s 12 Favorite Novels of 2013
- Lisa Marie’s 12 Favorite Non-Fiction Books of 2013
- Semtex Skittle’s 2013: The Year in Video Games
- 20 Good Things Lisa Marie Saw On Television in 2013
- 10 0f Lisa Marie’s Favorite Songs of 2013
- Lisa Marie’s 16 Worst Films of 2013
- Necromoonyeti’s Top 10 Metal Albums of 2013
- Things That Dork Geekus Dug In 2013
- Lisa Marie’s Best of 2o13 SyFy
Artist Profile: Chester Bloom (1918–1989)
Chester Bloom was born and raised in Canada. When he was 14, he and his family moved to Virginia after his father became a reporter for The Washington News Bureau. He studied art with The Arts Student League of New York and served in World War II. He began his career doing illustrations for crime magazines but he is best known for the covers he did for sports-themed pulp magazines. He retired from commercial illustration in 1950 and spent the rest of his career as a portrait painter.
Lisa Marie’s 12 Favorite Novels of 2013
Continuing TSL’s look back at the year that was, here’s my 12 favorite novels of 2013!
(And yes, you should read them all.)
- Ten Tiny Breaths by K.A. Tucker
- Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald by Theresa Ann Fowler
- The Flamethrowers by Racel Kushner
- The Fate of Mercy Alban by Wendy Webb
- Someday, Someday Maybe by Lauren Graham
- Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight
- Red Hill by Jamie McGuire
- The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
- Night Film by Marisha Pessl
- Just One Day by Gayle Foreman
- The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer
- NOS4A2 by Joe Hill
Tomorrow, my look back at 2013 continues with the list that everyone’s been waiting for — my top 26 films of 2013!
Other Entries In TSL’s Look Back At 2013:
- Lisa Marie’s 12 Favorite Non-Fiction Books of 2013
- Semtex Skittle’s 2013: The Year in Video Games
- 20 Good Things Lisa Marie Saw On Television in 2013
- 10 0f Lisa Marie’s Favorite Songs of 2013
- Lisa Marie’s 16 Worst Films of 2013
- Necromoonyeti’s Top 10 Metal Albums of 2013
- Things That Dork Geekus Dug In 2013
- Lisa Marie’s Best of 2o13 SyFy
44 Days of Paranoia #37: The Day of the Jackal (dir by Fred Zinnemann)
For our latest entry in the 44 Days of Paranoia, we take a look at the 1973 British thriller, The Day of the Jackal.
For our previous entry, I reviewed The Fugitive, a film that is often described as a classic but which, in my opinion, has failed to survive the test of time. Therefore, it’s appropriate that this entry is the exact opposite: a film that lives up to its reputation.
Taking place in the early 1960s, The Day of the Jackal tells the story of a nameless assassin (played by Edward Fox) who is hired by a group of terrorists to assassinate French President Charles De Gualle. Accepting the job, the assassin tells his employers to call him “The Jackal.”
We follow the Jackal as he prepares for the assassination. He meets with a gunsmith (Cyril Cusack) and has a special rifle designed. A forger gets him some fake ID papers but makes the mistake of trying to blackmail him. After disposing of the forger, the Jackal makes his way to Paris. Determined to protect his identity, the Jackal seduces both men and women so that he’ll be able to avoid having to check into a hotel. Whenever it appears that someone might be a security risk, the Jackal calmly kills them. It’s all strictly business.
However, the French do know that the Jackal is in Paris and that he’s planning to kill the President. In a plot twist that continues to be significant today, one of the terrorists has been captures and, after being brutally tortured, has revealed the plot. Inspector Lebel (Michael Lonsdale) is tasked with tracking down the Jackal and preventing the assassination.
When I talk about how much I love old movies, I’m talking about films like The Day of the Jackal, an unpretentious movie that achieve success not through flashy visual effects or overwhelmingly loud action scenes but instead by simply being a well-made film. For the most part, director Fred Zinnemann takes a low-key, almost documentary approach to the film’s material. Zinnemann establishes a pace that is deliberate but never boring.
The film also features two excellent lead performances. With his coldly aristocratic features, Edward Fox is perfectly cast as the nameless assassin. You not only believe that he could kill someone but you also believe that he could get away with it. He’s a thoroughly believable killer and it’s hard not to be impressed by just how good he is at being the bad guy. The Jackal’s sleek professionalism and charisma is contrasted with the gray and rather shabby middle-aged men who are trying to stop him. As played by Michael Lonsdale, Inspector Lebel is initially a rather underwhelming figure but, as the film progresses, his own strength is gradually revealed until he becomes a worthy adversary of the Jackal.
Finally, I should mention that the film ends with a little coda that is pure perfection. I’m not going to ruin it by revealing it here but it’s worth watching the entire film just for that final line.
Other Entries In The 44 Days of Paranoia
- Clonus
- Executive Action
- Winter Kills
- Interview With The Assassin
- The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald
- JFK
- Beyond The Doors
- Three Days of the Condor
- They Saved Hitler’s Brain
- The Intruder
- Police, Adjective
- Burn After Reading
- Quiz Show
- Flying Blind
- God Told Me To
- Wag the Dog
- Cheaters
- Scream and Scream Again
- Capricorn One
- Seven Days In May
- Broken City
- Suddenly
- Pickup on South Street
- The Informer
- Chinatown
- Compliance
- The Lives of Others
- The Departed
- A Face In The Crowd
- Nixon
- The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
- The Purge
- The Stepford Wives
- Saboteur
- A Dark Truth
- The Fugitive














